Greedy Bankers Hear from Chicago CWAers, 5,000 Other
Protesters
CWA: House Gets It Right on Health
Care Reform
CWA commended House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the
House leadership as they introduced a comprehensive
health care reform bill today.
"The House of Representatives health care proposal
gets it right. Rather than making those employers that
already pay toward their workers health coverage pay
more, it requires employers that don't pay to pay their
fair share. There is no tax on workers' health care
plans in the House bill, unlike the Senate version which
currently is asking working and middle income families
to finance health care reform," said CWA President Larry
Cohen.
The House bill will:
- Require most employers – with an exemption for
small businesses -- to share in the responsibility
for financing health care coverage.
- Help continue coverage for pre-Medicare
retirees.
- Extend health insurance coverage to millions of
uninsured persons, guaranteeing that most Americans
have quality, affordable coverage.
- Provide substantial subsidies to help make
coverage more affordable for middle income families,
and expand Medicaid to guarantee that coverage will
be affordable for lower income persons.
- Implement insurance market reforms to prevent
individuals from being denied coverage because of
pre-existing conditions.
- Reduce costs for individuals and small
businesses by eliminating uncompensated care,
reforming the delivery and provider payment systems,
and establishing a national exchange to facilitate
cost effective coverage.
- Establish a robust public insurance option to
ensure there is adequate competition in all areas of
the country, thereby holding down rates charged by
private insurers.
CWA
Fights Back Against Proposed Tax on Health Care;
Follow the campaign on Facebook, Twitter
As the Senate prepares to take up its health care
reform bill, CWA members are making tens of thousands of
phone calls to lawmakers and holding events across the
country, telling Congress that taxing middle class
benefits is no way to pay for health care.
News and events are updated regularly on CWA's health
care pages at Facebook.com and Twitter.com. Go to either
site and search for "CWAHealthCare," all one word. You
can visit the sites without registering, but you'll need
to sign up to get automatic updates.
Lots of locals are posting their activities -- for
example, CWA Local 9421 reported on Facebook that it
partnered with local activists "in an overnight vigil,
fast and phone bank for health reform in front of the
federal building in downtown Sacramento."
On Oct. 28, CWA members held another national call-in
day to Capitol Hill, making 3,282 calls telling senators
that real reform shouldn't include a tax on health care
plans. In recent weeks, CWA members have made nearly
19,000 calls.
The tax would be devastating for working families,
CWA Executive Vice President Annie Hill said. Employers
will cut benefits or otherwise pass the tax onto
workers.
CWA stresses that the House version of health care
reform has it right. The House bill, H.R. 3200 calls for
all employers – with an exemption for small business --
to cover their workers or pay an 8 percent payroll tax.
The Senate version makes those employers that already
pay, pay more. Instead, those that don't pay should pay
their fair share, CWA said.
For the latest developments, go to
www.healthcarevoices.org.
CWA, California Splicing Techs Win AT&T Arbitration
In a big victory for CWA in California and Local 9421
splicing technicians who lost hundreds of hours of
overtime to contractors hired by AT&T, an arbitrator has
ruled that the company violated its bargaining agreement
with CWA.
"This is a magnificent win for us," CWA District 9
Vice President Jim Weitkamp said in a letter to CWA
locals. "It is your win, due in large part to the
district-wide mobilization on the contracting issue that
we started after the 2006 convention."
A monetary award is yet to be determined but Weitcamp
said it could exceed $1 million. Arbitrator Barry
Winograd directed the union and company to meet and
negotiate over the amount owed.
"Monetary relief is justified to compensate for the
company's failure, well into 2006 and 2007, to utilize
employment options under the labor agreement as
alternatives to its excessive reliance on contractors,"
Winograd wrote in his 72-page decision.
The subcontracting mainly involved work on AT&T's
Project Light Speed, the company's fiber-optic network.
The company tried to claim that past practices made its
contracting legal.
Winograd placed a conditional order on AT&T requiring
it to "cease and desist" subcontracting on the splicers'
work for Project Light Speed. If the company decides to
resume contracting out, it must give CWA at least 60
days notice and promptly "negotiate over the effects of
that decision, including the prospect of hiring regular,
term, temporary and occasional employees, undertaking
internal upgrades and transfer, and increasing overtime
opportunities for company employees."
CLUW Elects Two CWAers to National Office
Delegates to the 15th convention of the Coalition of
Labor Union Women elected new officers, including two
CWAers as national vice presidents.
Elisa Riordan, CWA District 1 area director, and
Brenda Savoy, CWA Local 2336's secretary-treasurer, will
serve four-year terms.
CWA's General Counsel, Mary O'Melveny, also serves as
general counsel for CLUW.
Learn more about CLUW at
www.cluw.org.
CWAers Work to Get Out the Vote for Election Day
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CWA members joined a packed
crowd in Norfolk as President Obama urged
Virginians to elect Creigh Deeds governor on
Nov. 3. |
CWA members in Virginia and New Jersey are making
thousands of phone calls, knocking on thousands of doors
and handing out flyers supporting pro-worker candidates
in Virginia and New Jersey.
CWA members were on hand as President Obama rallied
Virginia voters in Norfolk, urging them to vote for
Democrat Creigh Deeds. Obama heads to New Jersey this
week for a rally in Newark with incumbent Democratic
Gov. Jon Corzine.
In New Jersey, nearly 350 CWA members have visited
union households the past two weekends and another 400
are heading out for labor walks this weekend. On
Election Day, 1,000 members are signed up for
Get-Out-the-Vote walks, said Hetty Rosenstein, CWA state
director for New Jersey.
CWA President Larry Cohen will kick off this
weekend's labor walk in northern Virginia. The event
begins at 9 a.m. at the Northern Virginia Area Labor
Federation office in Annandale at 4536 “B” John Marr
Drive. Meanwhile, CWA member and staff volunteers have
been calling every CWA family in Virginia this week.
Budget Rental Car Workers at Logan Airport Join CWA
A tremendous degree of unity and commitment by
workers at Budget Car Rental at Logan Airport in Boston,
Mass., overcame management's anti-union campaign last
week. The 60 workers won their union voice by a 33-17
vote; they will be represented by IUE-CWA Local 81201.
The workers' organizing committee united the workers
around workplace issues and successfully countered
management's efforts to divide them. IUE-CWA organizers
said Budget management was forced to cut short many of
its captive audience meetings because the organizing
committee kept taking them over.
The workers were assisted by IUE-CWA Local 81201
organizer Sheila McGillicuddy, President Jeff Crosby,
local organizing committee member Mark Whelton, and
Jorge Rivera, the local's chief steward at Avis.
Greedy Bankers Hear from Chicago CWAers, 5,000 Other
Protesters
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Calling for financial
reforms, Chicago CWA members march in Tuesday's
huge protest downtown outside a national meeting
of bankers. |
Joining more than 5,000 other protesters in the
streets of downtown Chicago, CWA members demonstrated
against banks and financial institutions that are
fighting financial reforms while spending taxpayers'
money on billions of dollars in executive bonuses.
Officers and members from CWA Local 4250 joined the
crowd of AFL-CIO members outside meeting of the American
Bankers Association.
"We came with a purpose and left energized," said Ron
Honse, CWA representative and political coordinator for
Illinois. "The speakers did a good job getting the
message across about how the average working man and
woman is affected. Union members turned out in force,
but it wasn't just unions. It was a good microcosm of
what the community looks like."
Honse said the huge protest was good practice for
what he expects will be an even bigger turnout in
mid-November when the organization of health insurers,
AHIP, meets in Chicago.